Researchers in Japan conducted a series of experiments in which a person would speak four different words and then say the cat's name.

Words were chosen which had the same length and accents as the cat’s actual name. The idea was that if the cat acted differently when its name was mentioned, then the kitties must recognize their name from the other words.

The experiment was conducted by having the cat’s owner and a stranger record the four words. The audio was played for the cats in 15-second intervals between each word, and the cat's name was always said last.

They found that all the cats moved or perked up their ears whenever their name was mentioned, regardless if it was their owner or not.

"We conclude that cats can discriminate the content of human utterances based on phonemic differences," the researchers wrote in the study published in Scientific Reports. "This is the first experimental evidence showing cats' ability to understand human verbal utterances."

What is still unknown is if the cats know that their name represents their identity. The findings only suggest that cats know that the word for their name holds special meaning.

So while Marbles may not know her name is Marbles, she knows those words are associated with a reward like food or petting.

Regardless, give your furry pal a treat and hope that she stops ignoring you! And whatever you do, don’t show her the “Cats” trailer! Meow!